Independent Senators Group


The Independent Senators Group is a parliamentary group in the Senate of Canada formed on March 10, 2016, by senators who were nominated to the Senate on the advice of Prime Ministers from various parties. It was formed as a technical group, to provide non-affiliated senators with representation on committees and funding equivalent to those who sit in the two partisan caucuses. It is akin to the crossbenchers in the British House of Lords.
With Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointing only non-affiliated senators, the ISG became the largest caucus in the Senate on October 30, 2017.
Media reports on senator appointments and voting patterns have questioned the extent to which the nominally unaffiliated senators are truly independent.

History

The Trudeau government began appointing independent senators, which in theory would make the Senate a non-partisan body. The growing number of these appointments created a challenge within the upper house as it had always been organized along partisan lines and there were no mechanisms in place to deal with a large number of independent senators, in terms of funding or appointments to committees, whereas the Conservative and Senate Liberal Caucuses were funded and guaranteed appointments.

As working group (2016–17)

On March 10, 2016, six non-affiliated senators, former Independent Progressive Conservative Senator Elaine McCoy, former Conservative caucus members Jacques Demers, John D. Wallace, Michel Rivard and Diane Bellemare and former Liberal Pierrette Ringuette formed an independent, non-partisan working group that would "ensure the rights of equality" for all senators, "regardless of their political or non-political affiliation" while working to restore "public confidence" in the upper house "as a necessary and vital institution".
In order to press for the recognition of the equal rights and obligations of non-affiliated senators and facilitate their activities, the group, which had grown to fifteen senators adopted the name "Independent Senators Group". On September 27, 2016 the members of the ISG elected McCoy to act as the group's facilitator until the end of the parliamentary term in June 2017. Unlike the two partisan caucuses, the ISG announced it would not have parliamentary whips and that its members would not vote together except on issues such as changes to Senate rules and logistics that would accommodate the existence and rights of independent senators.
The Senate formally recognized the ISG on December 2, 2016, passing a motion to fund the Independent Senators Group for the next two fiscal years. It was also agreed to make appointments of non-affiliated senators to committees proportionate to their numbers. However, the ISG's assigned budget of C$722,000 for 2017-2018 was less than the C$1 million allotted to each of the partisan caucuses.
Beginning in January 2017, the official Senate website distinguished affiliations between members of the Independent Senators Group and other non-affiliated senators by listing ISG members as "Non-affiliated ". Several non-affiliated senators, including Speaker of the Senate of Canada George Furey and Representative of the Government in the Senate Peter Harder remain entirely non-affiliated and are not members of the ISG.

As caucus (2017–present)

On May 17, 2017 senators voted to remove the requirement that a caucus must be formed by senators who are members of a political party, making the ISG equal under the rules of the senate with the two partisan caucuses. Following that change, McCoy stated that the ISG's influence in Senate standing committees will be increased to ensure its representation is proportional to the other caucuses.
A formal secret ballot election was announced in June 2017 to replace facilitator Elaine McCoy. At the close of nominations on September 22, 2017, Yuen Pau Woo was the only candidate for facilitator with Raymonde Saint-Germain the only candidate for Deputy Facilitator. Larry Campbell had intended to run but decided to recuse himself. Woo and Saint-Germain were elected unopposed on September 25, 2017.
The ISG adopted a new policy in October 2017, replacing its previous informal approach to membership with a requirement that all new applicants for membership in the caucus to be approved by at least 60 percent of current ISG members.
Following an agreement between the three Senate caucuses, a November 2, 2017 motion reallocating committee positions saw the ISG allotted both committee chair and committee member positions proportional to the size of their membership.
On November 4, 2019, eight senators from the ISG joined with two Conservative senators and one non-affiliated senator to form a new non-partisan parliamentary group known as the Canadian Senators Group. Speaking with CTV News' Don Martin on Power Play with Don Martin, CSG interim leader Scott Tannas cited the concern that following Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's radical overhaul of the Canadian Senate, the ISG, numbering 58 Senators, had simply become too large, and that a diversity of voices was needed in order to prevent a "tyranny of the majority." Included among those decamping to the CSG was Elaine McCoy, who previously served as the ISG's facilitator.
On November 7, 2019, non-affiliated Senator Tony Loffreda joined the ISG, bringing the group's caucus to 50.
On November 14, 2019, on the same day that the Senate Liberal Caucus dissolved and was succeeded by the Progressive Senate Group, the government's legislative deputy representative Diane Bellemare left her position and joined the ISG. On January 24, 2020, Senator Marc Gold left the Independent Senators Group, including his position as Caucus Liaison, to sit as a non-affiliated senator following his agreeing to become the new Representative of the Government in the Senate.
On May 8, 2020, Patricia Bovey left the ISG and joined the Progressive Senate Group.

Leadership

;Facilitators:
;Deputy Facilitator:
;Others:
A 2017 CBC News study found that independent senators appointed by Justin Trudeau voted with the government 94.5 percent of the time.
The Globe and Mail reported in May 2019 that Trudeau used Liberalist, a Liberal Party database, in order to vet prospective Senate appointees.